2015 Airshows
Titusville (Tico), FL
Virginia Beach, VA
Seymour Johnson AFB, NC
Halls, TN
Warsaw, IN
B-29 Air Power Tour Fort Wayne, IN
Thunder over Michigan, Bellevue MI
Wings over Halls Warbird
Photo Review
Warbirds at the Halls, TN Airshow 2015 -
August 8, 2015
The Wings over Halls Airshow takes place at
Arnold Field, which is named after a former mayor of the town and is
located on what was during WWII Dyersburg Army Air Base (DAAB).
Even though Dyserburg is ten miles away, it is the larger of the two
towns and the Army in its infinite wisdom named the base after it and
utilized DAAB as a B-17 Combat Crew Training Base. During its
twenty seven months in operation DAAB trained over 1,000 B-17 crews
using 72 aircraft stationed on the field. Upon completion of the
course the crews would get on a train at the station just east of the
base, and then go to Nebraska to pick up their new B-17s that they would
take to the combat zone. During training at DAAB twenty three
B-17s crashed resulting in the death of 114 trainees.
An aerial view of DAAB during WWII with north at the top.. Today
only the ramp and the runways remain and only runway 18-36 on the right
or east side of the photo is still active. The runway in the front
of the ramp is closed and was used at the 500 foot show line during the
show.
Actually this building still remains which was used for the storage of
the top secret Norden bombsight.
The Veterans' Museum is an 11,600 square foot building with many of the
displays dedicated to the history of DAAB. With the museum on site and
open during the show, one can do more than just watch airplanes fly.
One can spend some time in the museum and learn the history of the now
closed base.
One of the many displays and hundreds of
photos inside the building is this one which shows photos of twenty six
of the crews that were trained at DAAB.
This is the newest section of the museum is dedicated to military
hardware. The Dodge ambulance in the back served in the European
theater during WWII.
On Saturday morning I arrived just in time to see P-51 "Gunfighter" taxi
in.
T-34s, a T-6, Yak-52s and two TBMs grace this line of warbirds.
Show Time!!! And as is usual at many shows there was the flag jump with
the singing of the National Anthem to get things going.
What was unusual and something I had not seen before, is that the jumper
landed in the corn field immediately in front of the crowd.
The wind was out of the north and so to land into the wind he had to go
into the corn. If the wind had been out of the east or west I am
not sure he had the room to safely land on the small strip of grass in
front of the crowd.
What better way to open a show at the former B-17 base than with B-17
"Memphis Belle"?
The warbirds, including the B-17 throughout
show, did their turn arounds at each end of the field, always in sight
of the crowd.
There were both warbird and civilian aerobatics throughout the course of
the two hour show. Actually it was a one hour and fifty-six minute
show. I found this out in a half hour conversation Saturday night
at the hotel with the Airboss. After getting seven minutes behind at the
beginning of the show, he was able to get caught up and finish a little
early. The Airboss did an excellent job having the next act
already in the air and ready to perform once the current one finished.
There was no "dead time" at Wings over Halls. A very tight show!
George Kennedy has been flying the only aerobatic BT-13 on the airshow
circuit for several years now. While the narration changes on
regular basis, the flying stays superb.
Typically Matt Younkin takes off and then does a roll on takeoff.
Due to the only runway being 18-36 he, like all the other pilots, needed
to take off and the move into position. With the high corn I
missed many of the takeoffs as the cornfield absorbed the sound of the
engines.
Matt came back around and made his entrance to the show in this manner.
So focused was I on his act that I was unaware of the persons marking
his fly-in point. He used the airshow narrator's and airboss stand
as his second point.
P-51 "Gunfighter" did an aerobatic routine towards the end of the show
with this unusual gear down pass. Normally Mustang routines like to go
fast all of the time and keep the gear up.
Back again was the B-17 with the rest of the warbirds such as the two
TBMs in trail.
What I did not know until I spoke with the Airboss in the evening is
that Dave Berry is in the process of making at emergency landing in this
photo.
Dave is having a hard time seeing the runway as he blew an oil line and
his windscreen was covered with oil. But all turned out well as he
got down safely.
As the B-17 and the second TBM were doing their landings the two
Mustangs beat up the field. In total the crowd was treated to at
least ten passes back and forth, maybe more as I lost count, with one
aircraft trailing the other. I found out this is Airboss's
signature ending to the Hall's Airshow. There is nothing like a
couple of Mustang's beating up the field for ten or so minutes to give
one something to remember when leaving the show.
Combined my time in the museum and this great
little airshow, the trip was definitely worth the time and effort, and I
hope to be able to return again some day to the Wings over Halls Airshow.
Side trips
This was my first time into western Tennessee
so I used the travel time to visit a number of historic sites.
Below are two of them.
Fort Donelson
This is a section of the Confederate River Battery at Fort Donelson on
the Cumberland River. On February 6, 1862 Union gunboats attacked
neighboring Fort Henry twelve miles to the west on the Tennessee River,
resulting in the defending forces fleeing the fort and making their way
over land to Fort Donelson. On February 14th those same gunboats
came down the Cumberland River as seen above expecting to bombard Fort
Donelson into submission. After a ninety minute battle the
gunboats had been so badly damaged by the River Battery seen here they
had to retreat. The fort did surrender on February 16th after land
battles with the Union Army.
With the fall of Fort Donelson Clarksville and
then Nashville fell before the Union Forces. With the fall of Fort
Henry on the Tennessee River Union troops started landing up river at a
place called Pittsburgh Landing.
Shiloh
In March of 1862 Grant's Union forces started to land here at Pittsburg
Landing for a buildup to attack Corinth, MS, twenty two miles to the
southwest, which was an important Confederate railroad junction.
On Sunday, April 6, 1862 southern forces struck Grant's army first on
what is now a twelve square mile preserved battlefield. After a
day long battle, the Confederates appeared to have victory at hand as
Union forces had been pushed back four miles to Grant's final line of
defense at Pittsburg Landing. However, with darkness coming on and
the Confederate soldiers exhausted and out of ammunition, the final
assault was called of until the next morning. With the arrival of
Union reinforcements overnight, the tide of battle changed on Monday and
the Confederates had to retreat all the way back to Corinth, which was
then lost to them a month later.
The battle was named after Shiloh Church,
which means place of peace, of which this is a replica of, the original
church having been destroyed during the fighting. Shiloh was not a
place of peace on Sunday April, 6, 1862 because when the battle ended,
more Americans had been killed in one day's fighting than all of the
country's previous wars combined. It was a grim harbinger of what
was to come over the next three years.
Titusville (Tico), FL
Virginia Beach, VA
Seymour Johnson AFB, NC
Halls, TN
Warsaw, IN
B-29 Air Power Tour Fort Wayne, IN
Thunder over Michigan, Bellevue MI
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